I am looking for above camera seller , I am not after overly engineered one , simple design and cheap price and high image quality.
Some people does use lots of bolts , lacquered thick wood or thick metal. I am looking for lightweight one.
Dead Link Removed Has a preorder open for a $140 6x17 pinhole. But the sample images they shared on the kickstarter did not impress me like those from the Reality So Subtle mentioned by kier above.
I am looking for above camera seller , I am not after overly engineered one , simple design and cheap price and high image quality.
Some people does use lots of bolts , lacquered thick wood or thick metal. I am looking for lightweight one.
Umut -- if it is simple and lightweight you want, cut the end off a beer can, paint the inside flat black with black primer paint, put a cap over the end with a pinhole in it and there you are -- single shot anamorphic camera using 4 by 5 inch film, very lightweight, very simple. You could easily make up half a dozen in an afternoon.
Something using 120 film requires a bit more engineering, of course.
Mustafa, a beer can may be a little small for 4x5 paper.
I don't know how oatmeal offered in Turkey is packaged. In the US we can get it in fair sized (~130 mm diameter, ~ 240 mm high) pasteboard "cans" that have plastic caps. See http://www.quakeroats.com/product/hot-cereals/Old-Fashioned-Oats-Quick-oats.aspx to get an idea of what they look like. One of these might be better for your purposes than a beer can.
If I tried to use one of these as a pinhole camera I'd varnish it to make it stiffer and blacken the interior and cap.
Captured on 8x10 Tri-X in a Pringles potato chip can with a pinhole centered in one end. Exposure was varied from 20 to 200 seconds by sliding a sleeve up the can during the exposure.
Captured on 8x10 Tri-X in a Pringles potato chip can with a pinhole centered in one end. Exposure was varied from 20 to 200 seconds by sliding a sleeve up the can during the exposure.